How to Fight Blog Plagiarism Guerrilla Style

Two weeks ago I woke up to a suspicious pingback in my WordPress dashboard linking to my one-page business plan post. Sure enough, when I checked it out, there was my post–plagiarized word for word on a scraper site.

The first reaction of any hard-working blogger being plagiarized is to get angry, which I did. But then what? If you do a Google search on “blogging plagiarism,” you’ll more or less get these recommendations:

Contact the plagiarist and ask them to remove your content.

Contact their advertisers and file a “duplicate content” complaint.

Report them to the search engines.

Take legal action.

Name them and shame them.

These steps are good but not entirely practical. Contacting the plagiarist of a scraper site (step 1) is like trying to ask the guy who runs a chop shop to give you back your stolen car–it’s useless. In fact, the most you’ll find on scraper site is an overly generic about page (if even that) and the name “Admin.” Forget about contact info and a photo!

Steps 2-4 can be serious time-suckers, especially #4. If you’re a solo entrepreneur like me, time is your most precious asset. The time it would take to contact advertisers, search engines and, dare I say—lawyers—could permanently cripple your productivity.

So let’s look at #5– “name them and shame them.” This is the best option if you have just a few aggressive minutes to spare. Unlike the other, more traditional options, naming and shaming a plagiarist takes a true guerrilla-style approach to copyright infringement warfare.

There are a few ways to name and shame a plagiarist, but the quickest and most powerful is Twitter. It’s instantaneous and widespread, which is just the weapon you’ll need.

The first thing I did was tweet a rant about being plagiarized, and within one minute I had a small army of people joining me in passionate disgust of plagiarism.

The next thing that happened took full advantage of the plagiarist’s fatal mistake. For some reason this guy had his Twitter feed (@affiliatetips4u) on his scraper site! Once I saw that I knew I could finish him off.

@Wordful, 10:46am: @affiliatetips4u Got it. Don’t understand why you would do that in the 1st place: write your own stuff!!! #plagiarism

@affiliatetips4u, 10:40am: Site is down… Working on it… For now enjoy the post.. Sorry for the issues!

The instant bad and widespread exposure @affiliatetips4u got from me, @plagiarismtoday and my use of the hashtag #plagiarism just about wiped out whatever reputation this plagiarist was trying to build.

Within 3 1/2 hours and 9 tweets, not only was my stolen content removed, but the entire scraper site was taken down.

The plagiarist made a strategic error by being active on Twitter. Anyone who steals content for a living can’t expect to be active in social media–the honesty and transparency of the system does not permit these brazen violations.

If you’re dealing with a plagiarist who doesn’t use social media, you can still use Twitter to indirectly hit back at them using the same tactics I describe above.

You should also follow-up with an assertive comment on the offending site. Lorelle on WordPress offers some great copy and paste text that resembles a scary legal cease and desist letter.

Great job, I have someone currently stealing mine and others content for a wallpaper site. Much of which is public domain anyway, but on mine I have heaps of my own work. A very elusive bugger over @ wallpapers-e.com is making money from Adsense with stolen content!

Hope you dont mind me writing this one here, I want to name and shame!

great job on Twitter, I am going to reference this article for my own readers.